"All models are wrong" is a common aphorism in statistics; it is often expanded as "All models are wrong, but some are useful". It is usually considered to be applicable to not only statistical models, but to scientific models generally. The aphorism is generally attributed to the statistician George Box, although the underlying concept predates Box's writings.
Quotations of George Box
The first record of Box saying "all models are wrong" is in a 1976 paper published in the Journal of the American Statistical Association. The 1976 paper contains the aphorism twice. The two sections of the paper that contain the aphorism are copied below.
2.3 Parsimony
Since all models are wrong the scientist cannot obtain a "correct" one by excessive elaboration. On the contrary following William of Occam he should seek an economical description of natural phenomena. Just as the ability to devise simple but evocative models is the signature of the great scientist so overelaboration and overparameterization is often the mark of mediocrity.
2.4 Worrying Selectively
Since all models are wrong the scientist must be alert to what is importantly wrong. It is inappropriate to be concerned about mice when there are tigers abroad.
Box repeated the aphorism in a paper that was published in the proceedings of a 1978 statistics workshop. The paper contains a section entitled "All models are wrong but some are useful". The section is copied below.
Now it would be very remarkable if any system existing in the real world could be exactly represented by any simple model. However, cunningly chosen parsimonious models often do provide remarkably useful approximations. For example, the law PV = RT relating pressure P, volume V and temperature T of an "ideal" gas via a constant R is not exactly true for any real gas, but it frequently provides a useful approximation and furthermore its structure is informative since it springs from a physical view of the behavior of gas molecules.
For such a model there is no need to ask the question "Is the model true?". If "truth" is to be the "whole truth" the answer must be "No". The only question of interest is "Is the model illuminating and useful?".
Box repeated the aphorism twice more in his 1987 book, Empirical Model-Building and Response Surfaces (which was co-authored with Norman Draper).
The first repetition is on p. 74: "Remember that all models are wrong;
the practical question is how wrong do they have to be to not be
useful." The second repetition is on p. 424, which is excerpted below.
... all models are approximations. Essentially, all models are wrong, but some are useful. However, the approximate nature of the model must always be borne in mind ...
A second edition of the book was published in 2007, under the title Response Surfaces, Mixtures, and Ridge Analyses.
The second edition also repeats the aphorism twice, in contexts
identical with those of the first edition (on p. 63 and p. 414).
Box repeated the aphorism two more times in his 1997 book, Statistical Control: By Monitoring and Feedback Adjustment (which was co-authored with Alberto Luceño). The first repetition is on p. 6, which is excerpted below.
It has been said that "all models are wrong but some models are useful." In other words, any model is at best a useful fiction—there never was, or ever will be, an exactly normal distribution or an exact linear relationship. Nevertheless, enormous progress has been made by entertaining such fictions and using them as approximations.
The second repetition is on p. 9: "So since all models are wrong, it
is very important to know what to worry about;
or, to put it in another way, what models are likely to produce
procedures that work in practice (where exact assumptions are never
true)".
A second edition of the book was published in 2009, under the title Statistical Control By Monitoring and Adjustment
(co-authored with Alberto Luceño and Maria del Carmen
Paniagua-Quiñones). The second edition also repeats the aphorism two
times. The first repetition is on p. 61, which is excerpted below.
All models are approximations. Assumptions, whether implied or clearly stated, are never exactly true. All models are wrong, but some models are useful. So the question you need to ask is not "Is the model true?" (it never is) but "Is the model good enough for this particular application?"
The second repetition is on p. 63; its context is essentially the same as that of the second repetition in the first edition.
Box's widely cited book Statistics for Experimenters (co-authored with William Hunter) does not include the aphorism in its first edition (published in 1978).
The second edition (published in 2005; co-authored with William Hunter
and J. Stuart Hunter) includes the aphorism three times: on p. 208,
p. 384, and p. 440.
On p. 440, the relevant sentence is this: "The most that can be
expected from any model is that it can supply a useful approximation to
reality: All models are wrong; some models are useful".
In addition to stating the aphorism verbatim, Box sometimes
stated the essence of the aphorism with different words. One example is
from 1978, while Box was President of the American Statistical Association.
At the annual meeting of the Association, Box delivered his
Presidential Address, wherein he stated this: "Models, of course, are
never true, but fortunately it is only necessary that they be useful".
Discussions
There have been varied discussions about the aphorism. A selection from those discussions is presented below.
In 1983, the statisticians Peter McCullagh and John Nelder published their much-cited book on generalized linear models. The book includes a brief discussion of the aphorism (though without citing Box). A second edition of the book, published in 1989, contains a very similar discussion of the aphorism. The discussion from the first edition is as follows.
Modelling in science remains, partly at least, an art. Some principles do exist, however, to guide the modeller. The first is that all models are wrong; some, though, are better than others and we can search for the better ones. At the same time we must recognize that eternal truth is not within our grasp.
In 1995, the statistician Sir David Cox commented as follows.
... it does not seem helpful just to say that all models are wrong. The very word model implies simplification and idealization. The idea that complex physical, biological or sociological systems can be exactly described by a few formulae is patently absurd. The construction of idealized representations that capture important stable aspects of such systems is, however, a vital part of general scientific analysis and statistical models, especially substantive ones, do not seem essentially different from other kinds of model.
In 1996, an Applied Statistician's Creed was proposed. The Creed includes, in its core part, the aphorism.
In 2002, K.P. Burnham and D.R. Anderson published their much-cited book on statistical model selection. The book states the following.
A model is a simplification or approximation of reality and hence will not reflect all of reality. ... Box noted that "all models are wrong, but some are useful." While a model can never be "truth," a model might be ranked from very useful, to useful, to somewhat useful to, finally, essentially useless.
The statistician J. Michael Steele has commented on the aphorism as follows.
... there are wonderful models — like city maps....
If I say that a map is wrong, it means that a building is misnamed, or the direction of a one-way street is mislabeled. I never expected my map to recreate all of physical reality, and I only feel ripped off if my map does not correctly answer the questions that it claims to answer.
My maps of Philadelphia are useful. Moreover, except for a few that are out-of-date, they are not wrong.
So, you say, "Yes, a map can be thought of as a model, but surely it would be more precise to say that a map is a 'visually enhanced database.' Such databases can be correct. These are not the kinds of models that Box had in mind."
I agree. ...
In 2008, the statistician Andrew Gelman responded to that, saying in particular the following.
I take his general point, which is that a street map could be exactly correct, to the resolution of the map.
... The saying, "all models are wrong," is helpful because it is not completely obvious....
This is a simple point, and I can see how Steele can be irritated by people making a big point about it. But, the trouble is, many people don't realize that all models are wrong.
In 2013, the philosopher of science Peter Truran published an essay related to the aphorism. The essay notes, in particular, the following.
... seemingly incompatible models may be used to make predictions about the same phenomenon. ... For each model we may believe that its predictive power is an indication of its being at least approximately true. But if both models are successful in making predictions, and yet mutually inconsistent, how can they both be true? Let us consider a simple illustration. Two observers are looking at a physical object. One may report seeing a circular disc, and the other may report seeing a rectangle. Both will be correct, but one will be looking at the object (a cylindrical can) from above and the other will be observing from the side. The two models represent different aspects of the same reality.
Truran's essay further notes that Newton's theory of gravitation has been supplanted by Einstein's theory of relativity
and yet Newton's theory remains generally "empirically adequate".
Indeed, Newton's theory generally has excellent predictive power. Yet
Newton's theory is not an approximation of Einstein's theory. For
illustration, consider an apple falling down from a tree. Under Newton's
theory, the apple falls because Earth exerts a force on the apple—what
is called "the force of gravity". Under Einstein's theory, Earth does
not exert any force on the apple. Hence, Newton's theory might be regarded as being, in some sense, completely
wrong but extremely useful. (The usefulness of Newton's theory comes
partly from being vastly simpler, both mathematically and
computationally, than Einstein's theory.)
In 2014, the statistician David Hand made the following statement.
In general, when building statistical models, we must not forget that the aim is to understand something about the real world. Or predict, choose an action, make a decision, summarize evidence, and so on, but always about the real world, not an abstract mathematical world: our models are not the reality—a point well made by George Box in his oft-cited remark that "all models are wrong, but some are useful".
In 2016, P.J. Bickel and K.A. Doksum published the second volume of their book on mathematical statistics.
The volume includes the quote from Box's Presidential Address, given
above. It states that the quote is the best formulation of the "guiding
principle of modern statistics".
Additionally, in 2011, a workshop on model selection was held in
The Netherlands. The name of the workshop was "All models are
wrong...".
Historical antecedents
Although
the aphorism seems to have originated with George Box, the underlying
concept goes back decades, perhaps centuries. Some exemplifications of
that are given below.
In 1960, Georg Rasch said the following.
… no models are [true]—not even the Newtonian laws. When you construct a model you leave out all the details which you, with the knowledge at your disposal, consider inessential…. Models should not be true, but it is important that they are applicable, and whether they are applicable for any given purpose must of course be investigated. This also means that a model is never accepted finally, only on trial.
— Rasch, G. (1960), Probabilistic Models for Some Intelligence and Attainment Tests, Copenhagen: Danmarks Paedagogiske Institut, pp. 37–38; republished in 1980 by University of Chicago Press
In 1947, the mathematician John von Neumann said that "truth … is much too complicated to allow anything but approximations".
In 1942, the French philosopher-poet Paul Valéry said the following.
Ce qui est simple est toujours faux. Ce qui ne l’est pas est inutilisable.
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What is simple is always wrong. What is not is unusable.
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—Valéry, Paul (1942), Mauvaises pensées et autres, Paris: Éditions Gallimard |
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In 1939, the founder of statistical process control, Walter Shewhart, said the following.
… no model can ever be theoretically attainable that will completely and uniquely characterize the indefinitely expansible concept of a state of statistical control. What is perhaps even more important, on the basis of a finite portion of the sequence [X1, X2, X3, …]—and we can never have more than a finite portion—we can not reasonably hope to construct a model that will represent exactly any specific characteristic of a particular state of control even though such a state actually exists. Here the situation is much like that in physical science where we find a model of a molecule; any model is always an incomplete though useful picture of the conceived physical thing called a molecule.
— Shewhart, W. A. (1939), Statistical Method From the Viewpoint of Quality Control, U.S. Department of Agriculture, p. 19
In 1923, a related idea was articulated by the artist Pablo Picasso.
We all know that art is not truth. Art is a lie that makes us realize truth, at least the truth that is given us to understand. The artist must know the manner whereby to convince others of the truthfulness of his lies.
— Picasso, Pablo (1923), "Picasso speaks", The Arts, 3: 315–326; reprinted in Barr, Alfred H., Jr. (1939), Picasso: Forty Years of his Art (PDF), Museum of Modern Art, pp. 9–12